Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education CSE 142, Spring 2012 Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Lecture 1-1: Introduction; Basic Java Programs reading: 1.1 -

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 1: Computer Systems
Advertisements

Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Introduction to Java Programming.
Basic Java programs with println statements. 2 Compile/run a program 1.Write it –code or source code: the set of instructions in a program 2.Compile it.
Copyright 2006 by Pearson Education 1 Building Java Programs Chapter 1: Introduction to Java Programming.
Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Introduction to Java Programming.
Portions Copyright 2008 by Pearson Education CSE 142 Lecture 1 Course Introduction; Basic Java.
Copyright 2008 by Pearson Education Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Lecture 1-1: Introduction; Basic Java Programs reading: self-check: #1-14.
Outline Java program structure Basic program elements
Copyright 2006 by Pearson Education 1 Building Java Programs Chapter 1: Introduction to Java Programming.
COMP 14: Intro. to Intro. to Programming May 23, 2000 Nick Vallidis.
Copyright 2013 by Pearson Education Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Lecture 1-1: Introduction; Basic Java Programs reading:
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Java Software Solutions Foundations of Program Design Sixth Edition by Lewis.
1 Building Java Programs Chapter 1: Introduction to Java Programming These lecture notes are copyright (C) Marty Stepp and Stuart Reges, They may.
Copyright 2008 by Pearson Education Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Lecture 1-1: Introduction; Basic Java Programs reading: self-check: #1-14.
1 Identifiers  Identifiers are the words a programmer uses in a program  An identifier can be made up of letters, digits, the underscore character (
Topic 2 Java Basics “When a programming language is created that allows programmers to program in simple English, it will be discovered that programmers.
Java: Chapter 1 Computer Systems Computer Programming II.
Java Language and SW Dev’t
Introduction to Programming David Goldschmidt, Ph.D. Computer Science The College of Saint Rose Java Fundamentals (Comments, Variables, etc.)
The Java Programming Language
CSC204 – Programming I Lecture 4 August 28, 2002.
Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Introduction to Java Programming Copyright (c) Pearson All rights reserved.
Intro and Review Welcome to Java. Introduction Java application programming Use tools from the JDK to compile and run programs. Videos at
Copyright 2009 by Pearson Education Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Lecture 1-1: Introduction; Basic Java Programs reading: self-check: #1-14.
Chapter 2: Java Fundamentals
Java The Java programming language was created by Sun Microsystems, Inc. It was introduced in 1995 and it's popularity has grown quickly since A programming.
Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Introduction to Java Programming Copyright (c) Pearson All rights reserved.
Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Introduction to Java Programming.
Object- Oriented Programming (CS243)
1 WELCOME TO CIS 1068! Instructor: Alexander Yates.
Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Introduction to Java Programming Copyright (c) Pearson All rights reserved.
Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education CSE 142, Fall 2011 Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Lecture 1-1: Introduction; Basic Java Programs reading:
Advanced Programming CS206 Introduction 1. Programming Language Code A programming language is a language that uses specially defined words, grammar,
© 2011 Pearson Education, publishing as Addison-Wesley Chapter 1: Computer Systems Presentation slides for Java Software Solutions for AP* Computer Science.
Welcome to CSE 142! Zorah Fung University of Washington, Summer Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Lecture 1-1: Introduction; Basic Java Programs.
Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education APCS Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Lecture 1-1: Introduction; Basic Java Programs reading:
1 Problem Solving  The purpose of writing a program is to solve a problem  The general steps in problem solving are: Understand the problem Dissect the.
Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Introduction to Java Programming Copyright (c) Pearson All rights reserved.
CSc 127a/110, Autumn 2016 Lecture 1: Introduction; Basic Python Programs.
Zorah Fung University of Washington, Winter 2016
Lecture 1: Basic Java Syntax
Lecture 1: Introduction; Basic Python Programs
Working with Java.
Welcome to CSE 142! Whitaker Brand and Benson Limketkai
CSCI 161 – Introduction to Programming I William Killian
Lecture 2: Data Types, Variables, Operators, and Expressions
CSE 190D, Winter 2013 Building Java Programs Chapter 1
Advanced Programming CS206
Benson Limketkai and Marty Stepp University of Washington, Spring 2010
null, true, and false are also reserved.
Introduction to Java Programming
CS-0401 INTERMEDIATE PROGRAMMING USING JAVA
An overview of Java, Data types and variables
Chapter 1: Computer Systems
Benson Limketkai University of Washington, Spring 2011
Building Java Programs
Whitaker Brand University of Washington, Winter 2018
Brett Wortzman University of Washington, Summer 2011
Advanced Programming CS206
Topic 2 Java Basics “When a programming language is created that allows programmers to program in simple English, it will be discovered that programmers.
Building Java Programs
Building Java Programs
Welcome to CSE 142!.
CSE 142, Summer 2012 Building Java Programs Chapter 1
CSE 142, Spring 2012 Building Java Programs Chapter 1
Lecture 1: Introduction; Basic Python Programs
Zorah Fung University of Washington, Spring 2015
CSE 142, Winter 2014 Building Java Programs Chapter 1
Consult America Technology Consulting Services
Zorah Fung University of Washington, Winter 2016
Presentation transcript:

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education CSE 142, Spring 2012 Building Java Programs Chapter 1 Lecture 1-1: Introduction; Basic Java Programs reading:

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education Welcome to CSE 142!

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 3 Course Staff Hélène Martin (pronounced L-N) Pim Lustig ) Course registration, sections, etc. TAs Your primary point of contact Ask them about their experiences in CSE

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 4 Computer Science CS is about PROCESS – describing how to accomplish tasks "efficiently implementing automated abstractions" (Philip Guo)Philip Guo Computers are a tool Currently the best implementation platform What kinds of problems can they solve? How can they be made faster, cheaper, more efficient…? Science? More like engineering, art, magic… Hypothesis creation, testing, refinement important CS is still a young field finding itself

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 5 Programming program: A set of instructions to be carried out by a computer. program execution: The act of carrying out the instructions contained in a program. programming language: A systematic set of rules used to describe computations in a format that is editable by humans.

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 6 Course principles Lots of resources and people who want to help you Deliberate topic progression Coherence between lectures, sections, labs, homework, exams What you do will determine what you learn

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 7 Take this course if you… … like solving tricky problems … like building things … (will) work with large data sets … are curious about how Facebook, Google, etc work … have never written a computer program before … are shopping around for a major 142 is a good predictor of who will enjoy and succeed in CSE

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 8 Some modern languages procedural languages: programs are a series of commands Pascal (1970):designed for education C (1972):low-level operating systems and device drivers functional programming: functions map inputs to outputs Lisp (1958) / Scheme (1975), ML (1973), Haskell (1990) object-oriented languages: programs use interacting "objects" Smalltalk (1980): first major object-oriented language C++ (1985):"object-oriented" improvements to C successful in industry; used to build major OSes such as Windows Java (1995):designed for embedded systems, web apps/servers Runs on many platforms (Windows, Mac, Linux, cell phones...) The language taught in this textbook

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 9 Why Java? Relatively simple Object-oriented Pre-written software Platform independent (Mac, Windows…) Widely used #1 in popularity ie html html

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 10 Compiling/running a program 1. Write it. code or source code: The set of instructions in a program. 2. Compile it. compile: Translate a program from one language to another. byte code: The Java compiler converts your code into a format named byte code that runs on many computer types. 3. Run (execute) it. output: The messages printed to the user by a program. source code compile byte code run output

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 11 A Java program public class Hello { public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println("Hello, world!"); System.out.println(); System.out.println("This program produces"); System.out.println("four lines of output"); } Its output: Hello, world! This program produces four lines of output console: Text box into which the program's output is printed.

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 12 Structure of a Java program public class name { public static void main(String[] args) { ; statement ; ; statement ; } Every executable Java program consists of a class, that contains a method named main, that contains the statements (commands) to be executed. class: a program statement: a command to be executedmethod: a named group of statements

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 13 Names and identifiers You must give your program a name. public class Song { Naming convention: capitalize each word (e.g. MyClassName ) Your program's file must match exactly ( Song.java ) includes capitalization (Java is "case-sensitive") identifier: A name given to an item in your program. must start with a letter or _ or $ subsequent characters can be any of those or a number legal: _myName TheCure ANSWER_IS_42 $bling$ illegal: me+u 49ers side-swipe Ph.D's

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 14 Keywords keyword: An identifier that you cannot use because it already has a reserved meaning in Java. abstract default if private this boolean do implements protected throw break double import public throws byte else instanceof return transient case extends int short try catch final interface static void char finally long strictfp volatile class float native super while const for new switch continue goto package synchronized

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 15 Syntax syntax: The set of legal structures and commands that can be used in a particular language. Every basic Java statement ends with a semicolon ; The contents of a class or method occur between { and } syntax error (compiler error): A problem in the structure of a program that causes the compiler to fail. Missing semicolon Too many or too few { } braces Illegal identifier for class name Class and file names do not match...

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 16 Syntax error example 1 public class Hello { 2 pooblic static void main(String[] args) { 3 System.owt.println("Hello, world!")_ 4 } 5 } Compiler output: Hello.java:2: expected pooblic static void main(String[] args) { ^ Hello.java:3: ';' expected } ^ 2 errors The compiler shows the line number where it found the error. The error messages can be tough to understand!

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 17 System.out.println A statement that prints a line of output on the console. pronounced "print-linn” (NOT ‘print-L-N’) sometimes called a "println statement" for short Two ways to use System.out.println : System.out.println(" text "); Prints the given message as output. System.out.println(); Prints a blank line of output.

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 18 Strings and escape sequences (section)

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 19 Strings string: A sequence of characters to be printed. Starts and ends with a " quote " character. The quotes do not appear in the output. Examples: "hello" "This is a string. It's very long!" Restrictions: May not span multiple lines. "This is not a legal String." May not contain a " character. "This is not a "legal" String either."

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 20 Escape sequences escape sequence: A special sequence of characters used to represent certain special characters in a string. \t tab character \n new line character \" quotation mark character \\ backslash character Example: System.out.println("\\hello\nhow\tare \"you\"?\\\\"); Output: \hello howare "you"?\\

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 21 Questions What is the output of the following println statements? System.out.println("\ta\tb\tc"); System.out.println("\\\\"); System.out.println("'"); System.out.println("\"\"\""); System.out.println("C:\nin\the downward spiral"); Write a println statement to produce this output: / \ // \\ /// \\\

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 22 Answers Output of each println statement: a b c \\ ' """ C: in he downward spiral println statement to produce the line of output: System.out.println("/ \\ // \\\\ /// \\\\\\");

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 23 Questions What println statements will generate this output? This quote is from Irish poet Oscar Wilde: "Music makes one feel so romantic - at least it always gets on one's nerves – which is the same thing nowadays." What println statements will generate this output? A "quoted" String is 'much' better if you learn the rules of "escape sequences." Also, "" represents an empty String. Don't forget: use \" instead of " ! '' is not the same as "

Copyright 2010 by Pearson Education 24 Answers println statements to generate the output: System.out.println("This quote is from"); System.out.println("Irish poet Oscar Wilde:”); System.out.println(); System.out.println("\"Music makes one feel so romantic"); System.out.println("- at least it always gets on one's nerves -"); System.out.println("which is the same thing nowadays.\""); println statements to generate the output: System.out.println("A \"quoted\" String is"); System.out.println("'much' better if you learn"); System.out.println("the rules of \"escape sequences.\""); System.out.println(); System.out.println("Also, \"\" represents an empty String."); System.out.println("Don't forget: use \\\" instead of \" !"); System.out.println("'' is not the same as \"");